All the Pretty Horses

All the Pretty Horses

By Cormac McCarthy

Subjects: award:national_book_award=1992, American fiction (fictional works by one author), Travel, Cowboys, Fiction, coming of age, Fiction, Cowboys-Western Stories, Spanish language, Mexico, Texas, fiction, Prisoners, Prisoners-Fiction, Mexican-American Border Region, Fictional Works Publication Type, Americans, award:national_book_award=fiction, Horsemen and horsewomen, National Book Award Winner, Romance Norte Americano, Ranch life, Large type books, American, Mexico-Fiction, Readers, National Book Critics Circle Award Winner, Western stories, award:national_book_critics_circle_award=fiction, Fiction, romance, general, award:national_book_critics_circle_award=1992, Coming of age, Fiction, westerns, Mexico, fiction

Description: All the Pretty Horses is a novel by American author Cormac McCarthy published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1992. Its romanticism (in contrast to the bleakness of McCarthy's earlier work) brought the writer much public attention. It was a bestseller, and it won both the U.S. National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Along with The Crossing (1994), and Cities of the Plain (1998), it constitues McCarthy's "Border Trilogy", an elegy for the American Frontier, written in an unconventional format which omits traditional Western punctuation (such as quotation marks) and makes use of polysyndetic syntax in a manner similar to that of Ernest Hemingway. The book was adapted as a 2000 eponymous film, starring Matt Damon and Penélope Cruz, and directed by Billy Bob Thornton. (main source EN.wikipedia)

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